
<div>
  When this option is checked, multiple builds of this project may be executed
  in parallel.
  <p>
  By default, only a single build of a project is executed at a time &mdash; any
  other requests to start building that project will remain in the build queue
  until the first build is complete.<br>
  This is a safe default, as projects can often require exclusive access to
  certain resources, such as a database, or a piece of hardware.
  <p>
  But with this option enabled, if there are enough build executors available
  that can handle this project, then multiple builds of this project will take
  place in parallel.  If there are not enough available executors at any point,
  any further build requests will be held in the build queue as normal.
  <p>
  Enabling concurrent builds is useful for projects that execute lengthy test
  suites, as it allows each build to contain a smaller number of changes, while
  the total turnaround time decreases as subsequent builds do not need to wait
  for previous test runs to complete.<br>
  This feature is also useful for parameterized projects, whose individual build
  executions &mdash; depending on the parameters used &mdash; can be
  completely independent from one another.
  <p>
  Each concurrently executed build occurs in its own build workspace, isolated
  from any other builds.  By default, Jenkins appends "<tt>@&lt;num&gt;</tt>" to
  the workspace directory name, e.g. "<tt>@2</tt>".<br>
  The separator "<tt>@</tt>" can be changed by setting the
  <tt>hudson.slaves.WorkspaceList</tt> Java system property when starting
  Jenkins.  For example, "<tt>hudson.slaves.WorkspaceList=-</tt>" would change
  the separator to a hyphen.<br>
  For more information on setting system properties, see the <a
  href="https://jenkins.io/redirect/setting-system-properties"
  target="_blank">wiki page</a>.
  <p>
  However, if you enable the <i>Use custom workspace</i> option, all builds will
  be executed in the same workspace.  Therefore caution is required, as multiple
  builds may end up altering the same directory at the same time.
</div>
